Soil management system effects on N availability and tree productivity in chestnut planatations under Mediterranean conditions


Autoria(s): Raimundo, Fernando; Coutinho, João; Martins, Afonso; Madeira, Manuel
Data(s)

21/07/2016

21/07/2016

2015

Resumo

Soil tillage with chisel ploughing is the conventional soil management system in chestnut stands for fruit production in Northern Portugal. A study was developed to assess the effects of three soil management systems on in situ soil N mineralization dynamics, tree nutrition status and fruit productivity, in a 50-yr old chestnut stand. The treatments were: conventional tillage with a chisel ploughing twice a year (CT), no-tillage with rainfed improved pasture with leguminous and grasses plants (NIP), and no-tillage with spontaneous herbaceous vegetation - natural pasture (NP). The CT treatment showed a strong increase of the soil N mineral concentration following soil disturbance by tillage, but the cumulative net N mineralized along the year was significantly lower (51.8 kg ha-1) than in the NIP (85.1 kg ha-1) treatment. The NP treatment (65.9 kg ha-1) did not cause a reduction in the soil N mineralization when compared to the CT treatment. The mineralization rate (g mineralized N kg-1 total N) in 2004 was about 26, 30 and 38 in the treatments CT, NP and NIP, respectively. Treatments showed different soil N dynamics, the proportion of mineralized NO3--N being lower in the NP (10-48%) than in CT and NIP treatments (53-74%). Our study indicates that no-tillage systems improve the tree nutrition status and enhance productivity

Identificador

"Revista de Ciências Agrárias". ISSN 0871-018X. 38 (4) (2015) p. 547-563

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/11859

http://dx.doi.org/10.19084/RCA15139

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

SCAP

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #N mineralization #no-tillage #phosphorous #tree nutrition #chestnut
Tipo

article